Abstract
There is a need for valid and reliable instruments to focus on medication aspects of health literacy and help healthcare professionals address patients’ barriers to medication use. This cross-sectional study describes the conceptualization, development, and psychometric properties of the first Chinese Medication Literacy Measurement (ChMLM) to assess the level of health literacy on medication use. The 17-item ChMLM (ChMLM-17) and its short form, 13-item ChMLM (ChMLM-13), consist of four sections (vocabulary, over-the-counter labels, prescription labels, and advertisements) to cover six domains of medication-related health literacy. Multistage stratified quota sampling was attempted to recruit a representative sample in Taiwan. Receiver operating characteristic curves were used to identify the cut-off point for differentiating high and low medication literacy. Psychometric analyses were performed (n = 1410) to assess the reliability and validity separately on all samples and sociodemographic subgroups. The 17-and 13-item versions both had high construct validity among all patients and patients with low medication literacy. The developed ChMLM-17 and ChMLM-13 is expected to help healthcare providers and researchers to accurately measure medication-related health literacy and improve medication use in the real-world practice.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Lin, H. W., Chang, E. H., Ko, Y., Wang, C. Y., Wang, Y. S., Mafruhah, O. R., … Huang, Y. M. (2020). Conceptualization, development and psychometric evaluations of a new medication-related health literacy instrument: The chinese medication literacy measurement. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(19), 1–17. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17196951
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.